The Strategic Data-Backed Story Set-Up
Written by Dr. Sally Perkins , Authenticx
When we see quantitative data trends that change over time, we have the starting elements of a story.? When things change, we inevitably ask, “Why? What happened?”???
Stories compel our brains because something happens.? The characters are moving along when suddenly something changes, usually for the worse.? So, data trends are the start of a story. But stories don’t typically start with the “big happening,” or the “Uh Oh.” Rather, they start with relative “Normal” before the “Uh Oh” occurs.?
So too, data-backed stories need to start with a sense of normal to set the audience up to receive the “Uh Oh” — the change we see in the data.? The “Uh Oh” is most compelling when something painful occurs that the audience must feel for a period of time in order to want change.???
Read these three Data-Backed Storytelling Tips to learn more about how to set up the “Normal” with your quantitative trends and how to help the audience feel the pain of the "Uh Oh.”?
1. Think of quantitative data trends as stories.
“All I see are charts and graphs.?Where’s the story in that?”?
When you’re overwhelmed with multiple sources of data, charts, graphs, and tables, one simple place to start is to look for trends over time. After all, stories start at one point in time, then they move us through a sequence of events to another point in time.??
What’s important to remember, however, is that a chronology is not a story.? For example, we could say:
But those data don’t tell a story until two things happen. First, the “Normal” and “Uh Oh” of the story must be established (see the Story Elements ). In this case, “Normal” might be the average correlation between customer retention and satisfaction scores for the past few years.? Then, the “Uh Oh” must be named.?
The “Uh Oh” might be a simple question that perplexes us about the data: “Why in the world, in Q4, would retention scores have gone down while satisfaction scores went up?”???
Read the rest of the tip to learn how to give context to data trends with micro stories — click here!
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2. Avoid starting your story with the problem. Instead, start with the “Normal.”?
Occasionally, a good movie will submerge the characters, and by extension you, the audience, into a conflict or a crisis within the first few seconds of the film. You’re hooked, your cortisol is already up, and you have to know what comes next.
But inevitably, for the story to work, at some point you must know what the “Normal” was for the characters prior to the crisis to understand what those characters want and why.
But in contrast to audiences of Hollywood storytelling, audiences of data-backed stories usually need to be grounded in the “Normal” before getting to a crisis or problem.?To jump into the crisis could raise unnecessary questions, doubt, skepticism, or fear about where this crisis is coming from and whether it’s real. Instead, audiences are typically more open-minded about the “problem” of the story if they understand where it’s coming from.
Read the entire tip to understand how the "Normal" has the power to provide perspective for your readers — click here!
3. To drive change, bring the audience into the pain.
If Dorothy landed in Oz, immediately met the Good Witch Glenda, clicked her red shoes together, and went home, we would neither care about nor remember the story. We care about Dorothy because we feel her pain of wanting to get home and the suspense of every obstacle in getting to Oz entices us to stay with the story until it’s resolved.
So too, effective data-backed storytellers don’t just name the problem, they take the audience into the pain point by sharing data to show prevalence, evolution over time, and impact. They also help the audience feel the pain by giving examples of the impact on real people.
For example, a strategically designed story might use conversational data to show what customers say they are wanting — their “object of desire.” Then the story might show quantitatively how often the customers are struggling to get what they want. That data point might be followed by qualitative micro customer stories that show the audience how it feels to the customers not to be able to get what they want.
Read the whole tip to bridge a character's pain to your readers with a story structure that brings emotional and cognitive emotion — click here!
Sally Perkins serves as Sr. Manager of?Storytellers at Authenticx. She analyzes quantitative and qualitative conversational data from which she crafts impactful data-backed stories that offer insights into how professionals across industries, such as healthcare, can improve the customer experience and their business outcomes.?
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